Neonatal surgery without anaesthesia
In 1986, the world was shocked when
reports of infants undergoing major surgery with
out
anesthesia
arose in both the USA
and
UK.
In the USA, mothers of two premature infants wrote
letters
to the medical journal, BIRTH, protesting the “barbarism of surgery without anesthesia.”..
Why did infants not receive
anesthesia that was comparable to that received by an adult?
In the following years, numerous
books and articles were written on the subject
. A survey of such literature reveals
that the two
repeatedly cited reasons
were: 1. Infants do not have the capacity
to perceive pain. 2. It is
too risky
to use potent anesthetics on infants, given the risk for cardiorespiratory compromise and death...
The
19th
century surgeon was rough, having inherited an attitude of
indifference to pain from the days
predating anesthesia. It was said
that the role of a surgeon was to preserve life and not to prevent
the temporary pain of the experience.
As such, the use of anesthesia was originally restricted to
those considered sensitive, primarily the rich, white
and educated women
and children...
...one of the two consistently
cited reasons
for
the withholding of
anesthesia
from neonates was
the belief that infants are insensitive to pain.
When the American
Academy of Pediatrics released its statement
on neonatal anesthesia in 1987, it cited the
commonly taught
rationale that “nerve pathways [in neonates] are not sufficiently myelinated to
transmit painful
stimuli or that neonates do not
have sufficiently integrated cortical function to
recall painful experiences...
Continue reading at
this submission to the Osler Student Essay Contest.
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